Evidence to Policy

Are you sufficiently worried about superbugs?

Professor Timothy Leighton

Unless tackled, the rise of AntiMicrobial Resistance (AMR) will, by 2050 (see page 6), be killing more people than cancer, and current methods of food production will be untenable. However, action to prevent this needs to start now, and requires a strategy that extends beyond finding funds and using them through our existing funding models.

someone will discover, produce, and roll-out globally an antibiotic replacement that is effective and to which resistance will never develop faster than we can produce replacements;

behaviour of the public, prescribers, retailers and food producers will change from current levels of antimicrobial guardianship (see page 6) to a sustainably responsible level.

Should we have a dedicated parallel plan resourced for a future where the steps to proper guardianship were implemented too late, with insufficient effectiveness or global coverage, and where any new antibiotic replacements were only a stopgap against their own imminent resistance issues?

That is to say, should we plan for a world without antibiotics?

Even if future antibiotics are available, they will be restricted to a far narrower set of interventions than currently, and resistance to them will be delayed by making use of discoveries put in place to prepare us for a world without antibiotics.

I urge us to ask if we are acting in too optimistic a fashion regarding the forthcoming AMR apocalypse, and so are adapting our current research and impact strategy rather than revolutionizing it. The ingenuity in how to spend global funds must exceed that required to set those funds aside. AMR covers all UK research councils and many government departments (see page 71), which reflects its seriousness. But with so much of AMR out-of-remit for a given body, and in the remit of another, we lack a joined-up approach that brings together networks of researchers and impact-generators (e.g. industry, NGOs) who collaborate because they tackle a common problem, regardless of their own topic of expertise. This differs from the traditional way of establishing research groups based on commonality of topic and facilities.

I recommend that we:

support groups that use the commonality of the problem they face (AMR) to bring together the multidisciplinary collaborations of the researchers who we expect to be leading AMR research in 10-20 years;

allow fundamental research, translation, and outreach to be seamlessly joined into programmes that span as many disciplines and Technology Readiness Levels (TRLs) as AMR does. Public education in AMR must be a coordinated priority (see page 1), not an addenda to a plethora of separate research projects. Projects that plan to conduct fundamental research with an industry who will then manufacture should not be out-of-bounds because funding agencies have remits to cover only a subset of the TRL spectrum: we need such projects, because AMR grows so quickly as to leave the traditional route of publishing research, and passively expecting others to discover that publication and make all the impact from it, too slow.

In the popular view, AMR is a healthcare issue, with a smaller number of people aware of the use of antibiotics in intensive farming. However AMR cannot be so easily pigeonholed, and our policymakers and research-and-translation organizations should not operate as if it can, because AMR seamlessly crosses boundaries and profoundly affects unexpected areas of life. As an example, on 25 November 2016 NAMRIP (the Network for AntiMicrobial Resistance and Infection Prevention) will co-host with the Food Standards Agency at the FSA headquarters in London, a meeting entitled ‘Food Retailers, Supply Chains and the Anti-microbial Resistance Challenge’ (sponsored by ESRC, EPSRC, FSA and NAMRIP). It will explore how the retail sector affects the rise and spread of AMR, and how it must respond to minimize its contributions to this growing crisis, and the consequences to it of AMR. AMR will not be eliminated from the world, and the question is how we mitigate its affects, and invest to maximize those mitigations.

Timothy is a Professor of Ultrasonics and Underwater Acoustics withing Engineering and the Environment at the University of Southampton, UK. He is the founding Chairman of the University Strategic Research Group NAMRIP (Network for Anti-Microbial Resistance and Infection Prevention) and founding Chairman of HEFUA (Health Effects of Ultrasound in Air).

5th December 2016

Learn more about StarStream: an invention that cleans with low volumes of cold water and few (or no) additives and watch the video below.

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